Wednesday 23 July 2008

Qik Thinking: Social Media and Visual Orientation


At the weekend, I took my Cub on Hyde Park safari – we went on manoeuvres, enjoying the many tourist temptations that lie in wait, basking in the London sun.

Ranging up the Serpentine, we surprised upon the just-completed Pavilion installation by Frank Gehry – and this is where words, and blog, fail me. I’m not usually taken with ‘contemporary art’, but this was dynamic, dramatic, powerful; a creature of glass, wood, angle and sunlight that stood bright against the sky.

I took pictures with my little cam and found myself wishing I could share my entrancement, the wonder the work created. I wanted to do the Qik thing – I needed to be ‘live and streaming’; the passion and immediacy of the visual was the only way to express how I felt.

Fiction writers – particularly in science fiction and fantasy – paint incredibly powerful visuals with words, imagination, experience, ardour. Done right, these visuals don’t come to you, the reader, from the page, they’re powerful enough to spontaneously ignite in your mind’s eye. But they take time – and editing – and proof-reading…

Social Media is of the ‘NOW!’ In the flesh, communication is about body-language and eye-contact more than it is voice – and this holds true on the web; we perceive more by image than word. Recently, the loss of the S3 server deprived Twitter of both avatars and backgrounds – and we were instantly disconcerted. Like faces, we need patterns for immediate recognition.

A magical moment, wherever you find it, is there-and-gone – if we want to share it, it’s up to us to choose the best tool and platform. Blogging needs focus, both reading and writing take time; we can instant-hit-upload our images to twitpic, utterz or flickr – or we can, quite literally, see though each other’s eyes by sharing the optical experience.

Walking round the Serpentine Gallery really brought that home to me for the first time.

One might say: a Qik-ture paints a thousand tweets?

5 comments:

John Rivers said...

I'd agree with you, but that pun was so terrible I'm going to have to lie down.

Michael Galvin said...

indeed, do you have a capable phone?

Danacea said...

Sadly not - my little Samsung isn't up to the task!

This is something I plan on rectifying asap - my phone won't iSync, meaning I need a new handset... plus I'm on an 02 monthly contract anyway...

At some point, when the madness has calmed down and there's actually stock in the local store, there's an iphone with my name on it ;-D

Anonymous said...

Thanks for this great blog. I love it. Thanks mostly for yur time.

Danacea said...

And for yours - blogs are kinda pointless unless people red them :)